Given the 2-D, overhead or bird's eye view of a building, the student
will select the corresponding 3-dimensional image (how the building looks
if it is viewed from the ground).

Given a variety of 2 dimensional shapes within a map the student
will demonstrate knowledge of the definition of a polygon by correctly
identifying the shapes that are polygons.

Given an overhead view map, the student will correctly identify
the number of sides of a given polygon and its corresponding name based
on thenumber of sides.

The student will draw an accurate overhead view of a familiar area,
including the significant buildings, roads, structures and land forms and
a map legend showing the map symbols.
Subheader: List of Materials for Group Activity

For the Group Activity listed at the end of this lesson, students will need
the following materials:

Large sheets of paper
Colored pencils or other drawing tools
Optional: stencils of various shapes for drawing landmarks, building
features, etc.

Suibheader: Accommodation Issues

The "Bird's Eye View" lesson is highly visual in nature, requiring students to look at and analyze complex presentations. For students who have low vision or who are blind, this lesson may be problematic. We suggest the use of pipe cleaners or similar tactile materials to create the lines, 2-dimensional shapes and 3-dimensional shapes discussed throughout this lesson. In addition, it may be useful for visually disabled students to work with a sighted peer in approaching this lesson; the latter may well have some creative approaches towards explaining the lesson.

Subheader: Generating Problems for Additional Practice

Take a walk around the school's neighborhood. Ask students to discuss
and reach a consensus about what various items would look like from the
air (buildings, trees, mailboxes, etc.) Keep track of how many of these
objects are not polygons, and how many represent each type of polygon (triangle,
quadrilateral, pentagon, etc.)

Using a Web search engine (Yahoo, WebCrawler, etc.), do a search on the
words "aerial" and "view." Using these images, try
to find and identify as many polygons as possible.

We encourage teachers to send us examples of additional problems that they
have found useful; we will then post these on this page.
Suggestions for Additional Activities

Invite a local pilot to discuss what s/he sees from the air and how this
affects her/his process of flying.

We encourage teachers to send us examples of additional activities that they
have found useful; we will then post these on this page.